FORT ASHBY, W.Va. -- Family members of an Army reservist photographed with naked Iraqi
prisoners said Tuesday she was merely a "paper-pusher" who was in the
"wrong place at the wrong time."

Pictures of Spc. Lynndie England, 21, and other soldiers have sparked an international
outcry over the U.S. military's handling of Iraqi war prisoners.

In one photo, England is shown making a thumbs-up gesture behind a pyramid of naked
Iraqi men; in another, cigarette dangling from her lips, she points to a hooded and naked
prisoner.

"It's ridiculous," said Destiny Goin, 21, who has lived with England's extended
family since high school and considers herself England's sister.

"It's her picture that you see more than anyone else's, and she really wasn't
involved. She was just in the wrong place at the wrong time."

Unlike six other members of the 372nd Military Police Company based in Cumberland, Md.,
England has not been charged but she is being detained at Fort Bragg, N.C.

Goin said England has been restricted to base and has not been given access to legal
counsel.

A spokeswoman at Fort Bragg referred calls to an Army spokesman in Virginia, who did not
immediately return phone calls.

Goin said England and the six soldiers who have been charged are "scapegoats --
that's what they're being used for."

England was trained to be a "paper pusher" who helped process prisoners at the
Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad, said Goin and England's brother-in-law James Klinestiver.
She was in the area where the photos were taken to visit friends in the 372nd who served
as guards, the two said.

Goin and Klinestiver said the family is furious with the comments of President Bush, who
said he was "disgusted" by the photographs.

"He doesn't know what these guys are going through," Klinestiver said. Referring
to Bush's limited National Guard service during the Vietnam War, he added, "How can
you make decisions for our military unless you've served yourself?"